According to the survey from the nonpartisan Public Religion Research Institute, the survey, “One Nation, Divided, Under Trump,” also found that just over four in 10 white evangelicals consider themselves “weak Trump supporters” and that they could pull their support from the president.

About 11 percent of white evangelicals, meanwhile, said they were “weak Trump opponents” and their opinion could change, but 13 percent of white evangelicals said they were “strong” opponents to Trump and he could do nothing to win their approval.

The survey also showed that 72 percent of white evangelicals approve of Trump’s job performance so far. In comparison, 84 percent of Republicans approve of the president’s work.

“What struck me is that Trump supposedly got 81 percent of the white evangelical vote and he now has 72 percent approval, which means that white evangelicals are still tracking roughly what they voted," Henry Olsen, a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center, said after participating in a panel discussion about the newly released survey.